Difference between revisions of "Greater Rifts"
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'''Exit Obelisk''': Greater Rifts "end" when the Guardian is killed, and no more monsters will spawn, even if players head down to lower levels. GRifts have the same exit obelisks as normal Rifts, which will take players back to town if clicked upon. | '''Exit Obelisk''': Greater Rifts "end" when the Guardian is killed, and no more monsters will spawn, even if players head down to lower levels. GRifts have the same exit obelisks as normal Rifts, which will take players back to town if clicked upon. | ||
Revision as of 22:58, 6 August 2014
Greater Rifts (GRs or GRifts, initially known as Tiered Rifts) are a higher level of Nephalem Rift, meant to provide a progressively greater challenge with bigger rewards as players progress to higher and higher levels. They are found in Reaper of Souls and the console Ultimate Evil Edition, but not in regular Diablo 3. Greater Rifts are timed, and *must* be completed within 15 minutes to earn rewards. All gold and treasure in Greater Rifts drop from the Greater Rift Guardian (GRG) which is an upgraded version of the regular Rift Guardians. Normal monsters do not drop items or gold, and there are no chests or destructibles in GRifts.
Difficulty: Greater Rifts are numbered as a measure of their difficulty. A level 1 Greater Rift is very easy, equivalent to Normal difficulty (or less.) Greater Rifts scale up quickly though, and will become challenging for any player ability. Level 8 is equivalent to about Torment 1, Level 15 is equivalent to about Torment 3, and Level 25 is approximately the same as Torment 6. The are 100 levels of Greater Rifts, and during testing players repeatedly found skill and item exploits enabling them to progress all the way to the end.
No Respecs: Characters can reallocate their Paragon Points while in an active Rift, but can not respec or make any changes to their equipment. (Skills and items can be changed only once the Guardian is dead or before entering a new Grift.) Gear could be changed in town during an active Grift, and players would exit to shift around items (such as donning one of the elemental damage immunity legendary amulets), but this exploit was eliminated in a patch on August 5, 2014.
Rewards: Items and gold do not drop in Greater Rifts, and there are no chests or other clickables. All treasure comes from defeating the Greater Rift Guardian, who drops a huge amount of stuff, about double that of a normal Rift Guardian, and has a very high probability of dropping at least one legendary item. (Note that the lack of gold and chests kills the effectiveness of legendary items such as Goldwrap and Harrington Waistguard that proc up in effectiveness via gold pickups or chest/clickables opening.)
Shrines: There are very few shrines or pylons in Greater Rifts. Pylons are seen occasionally, but their bonuses last only 15 seconds (instead of the usual 30) and Blizzard specifically said that Conduit Pylons would not be found in Greater Rifts since they are so powerful they would skew the entire rift Leaderboard system.
Treasure Goblins: Early in PTR testing Goblins dropped gold and items as usual. This was soon patched to make them drop only the orange orbs that boost completion percentage, which dead Elites also drop. Further changes may be in store.
Progress Bar:The progress bar in a Greater Rift increases gradually from killing trash mobs, but jumps up by larger amounts for Elite kills. (Elites drop objects that look a bit like gooey orange health orbs, which count for big boosts in the progress bar when collected.) This is a feature designed to keep players from simply rushing past Elites to more quickly finish the rift by killing trash mobs, as can be done in normal Nephalem Rifts, and players will fill their progress bar more quickly by killing Elites than by skipping them, except in very rare long Elite battles.
Exit Obelisk: Greater Rifts "end" when the Guardian is killed, and no more monsters will spawn, even if players head down to lower levels. GRifts have the same exit obelisks as normal Rifts, which will take players back to town if clicked upon.
Accessing and Process
- Get a Greater Rift Keystone level 1 from completing a Nephalem Rift. - Drop rate still being determined.[1]
- Use the GR Keystone to open a portal to a Greater Rift at the regular Nephalem Obelisk next to Orek.
- Kill all the mobs in the Greater Rift before the timer runs out.
- No regular or champion mobs drop loot in Greater Rifts.
- The Rift Guardian will drop loot regardless if the timer has run out or not.
- If the Rift Guardian is killed before the timer runs out he will drop a Greater Rift Keystone.
- GRKs are upgraded via Urshi, and a higher level GRK will be created based on how fast the rift was cleared.
- Use the new GRK to enter a Grift of that level, and repeat.
Progress Bar and Rift Speed
The progress bar in a Greater Rift looks the same as the bar in a normal Nephalem Rift, with two added slider needles, displayed above and below the bar. The total bar coloured in orange, and the icon above it show your current progress towards completing the rift. The icon below it and any colour in blue shows how fast you need to progress to complete the rift in time.
When players are battling through a Rift that's just at the limit of their killing power, they will often see their progress dropping behind, or moving slightly ahead of the timer bar, depending on the monster density and their relative sleepd. Since the Rift Guardian appears last and has very high hit points, players must be some distance ahead of the end time on the progress bar to have time to finish the Guardian as well, and most Rifts "fail" while players are locked in fevered battle with the GRG.
Since the speed will vary quite a bit depending on the monster spawn, players can get unlucky and fail to complete a Rift due to poor enemy density. The opposite can be true as well, and players are advised not to beat a Rift too quickly if they're approaching the limit of their ability. For example, if you get a very easy spawn on a level 20 rift, you might want to stall for a few minutes before beating the Rift Guardian, so your GRKs would only upgrade to level 21 or 22, instead of jumping all the way up to say level 25, where you'd be over your head and unable to complete in time. (Or in danger of death if you're playing Hardcore.)
Players can judge their speed in a rift and know if they need to go faster or slower depending on the progress bar. Characters who are well ahead of the time but coming close to death should look to improve their Toughness and defensive properties/skills. Characters who are having no trouble surviving but are not killing fast enough to keep up with the timer should look to raise their DPS, perhaps by trading off some Toughness or defensive buffs. (These changes can not be made in any given rift, and must be made between games.)
When characters fail to complete a rift in time they can still earn the item and gold rewards for killing the Greater Rift Guardian. They just fail to earn more Greater Rift Keystones and thus can not progress to a higher level Rift. If they have no more GRKs they must restart at a level one GR (or go clear normal Rifts until they find a GRK) and work their way back up.
Difficulty
Greater Rifts do not use usual Diablo 3 difficulty system. GRs are numbered and are easiest at #1, with a steady progression in difficulty all the way up to rank 100. Early estimates of equivalent difficulty levels came from various sources, but tended to agree on the general difficulty range.[2] [3]
Approximate Greater Rift Level = Difficulty
- Greater Rift Level 1 = Normal
- Greater Rift Level 3 = Hard
- Greater Rift Level 4 = Expert
- Greater Rift Level 6 = Master
- Greater Rift Level 8 = Torment 1
- Greater Rift Level 12 = Torment 2
- Greater Rift Level 15 = Torment 3
- Greater Rift Level 17 = Torment 4
- Greater Rift Level 20 = Torment 5
- Greater Rift Level 25 = Torment 6
- Greater Rift Level 25+ = Harder and harder.
As Greater Rifts must be completed within the 15 minute time limit, simply surviving them is not enough to progress. Characters must be balanced to succeed on higher level Rifts, or play in parties that create balance. A character with very high Toughness but not a lot of DPS, who can grind out Torment 6 in normal play, will not succeed on higher level GRs since they won't be able to kill fast enough. Likewise, characters with very high DPS but a lack of survivability will die too often, and without a "restart at corpse" option they will waste too much time running back from the start of the level.
Characters need high killing power and the ability to stay alive, to be able to finish higher level rifts quickly enough to advance.
The difficulty of higher Greater Rifts is something that will be balanced throughout the PTR process. Blizzard recently confirmed. [4]
Nevalistis: There isn’t a direct correlation between Greater Rift difficulty and the usual difficulty modes. They are independent from one another, though you can make rough comparisons through your own experimentation.
However, we do plan on tweaking the difficulty scaling in the next PTR patch, so you may find those lines different from what you’re experiencing now and perhaps a bit easier to draw. We really appreciate the feedback we’ve received on Greater Rifts so far, and we look forward to seeing your thoughts in the next PTR patch!
Rewards
All gold and item rewards in Greater Rifts are granted by the Greater Rift Guardian at the end of the level, who pops with a massive shower of gold, items, and materials, including usually at least one legendary item.
No gold or items are meant to drop (early in the PTR Patch testing some are still being rarely found from destructibles that haven't been completely removed) from normal or Elite enemies in a Greater Rift, there are no chests or destructibles or clickables (loose floor tiles, dead bodies, armor/weapon racks, etc). Kills do grant experience as well as Rift Progress, but the gold and item and material rewards come entirely from the Greater Rift Guardian.
Greater Rift Reveal
Blizzard revealed the first details about Greater Rifts in a Patch 2.1 preview blog on June 17, 2014.[5]
...
While Greater Rifts are a type of Nephalem Rift, there are some key differences between the two features. In Greater Rifts:
- You’ll race against a clock to fill a progress bar by accruing monster kills.
- Most monsters do not drop loot; rewards have been completely shifted to the Rift Guardian.
- This removes conflicting pressure from attaining a better time versus picking up all your loot.
- Monsters grant differing amounts of progress for your progress bar; the tougher the monster, the more they fill up your progress bar.
- You cannot resurrect at your corpse or in town while in a Greater Rift -- only at the last checkpoint.
- Note that, currently, if you die in a Greater Rift on a Hardcore character, that death will be permanent.
- You cannot use player banners or the Teleport option if the target player is in a Greater Rift.
- Higher Greater Rifts levels are progressively more difficult.
- This difficulty is separate from the standard difficulty settings (Master, Torment I-VI, etc.)
If you complete a Greater Rift before time expires you’ll advance to the next difficulty level. Should your time be exceptionally good, you might even skip a few levels! If time instead expires, you’ll have reached the end of your current Greater Rift journey and your best results will be posted to the appropriate Leaderboards.
Greater Rift Leaderboards
The top characters and teams during each Season will be ranked on Leaderboards, giving bragging rights and epeen to the most dedicated players.[5]
Greater Rift leaderboards will be split between both Hardcore and Normal gameplay modes as well as Seasonal and Non-Seasonal characters. To help encourage a variety of play styles and allow you to measure yourself against similar competitors, we’ve also broken up Greater Rift leaderboards into the following categories:
- Solo play for each class (e.g. top players for Barbarian, Demon Hunter, Crusader, etc.)
- 2-Player Groups
- 3-Player Groups
- 4-Player Groups
Media
Screenshots and videos from Greater Rifts.
ZiggyD with a very informative video showing his Demon Hunter progressing from L1 up to a L27 Greater Rift in a party.
Solo Barbarian Greater Rift play from Eisenheim TVfans.
References
- ↑ Greater Rift Keystone Drop Rate.
- ↑ Greater Rift early feedback - Sidereel via Reddit, 27/06/2014
- ↑ Greater Rift playthrough video - ZiggyD gaming stream, 27/06/2014
- ↑ Greater Rift Difficulty - Blizzard CM, 04/06/14
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Greater Rift Reveal - Blizzard Entertainment, 17/06/2014
Items of Diablo III [e] Item Basics Normal Items Crafting Legendary Armor I Legendary Armor II Legendary Weapons 1h Legendary Weapons 2h Item Sets |
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